Daniel Brodhead IV (1736-1809) was the fourth of his name, born to an old New York family in Marbletown. When he was a boy, his father moved the family to Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania. There, Daniel IV saw firsthand the struggle between Natives and Settlers for the same ground. In this case, it was the Lenape/Delaware, whom he would become familiar with later in life. The family homestead was attacked numerous times. When Daniel's father died, Daniel sold his share of the family homestead and headed for better prospects. He would work a series of odd jobs before finding his calling as a soldier in the American Revolution.
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He would lead an expedition against the Ohio-based Seneca in 1779 in support of the Sullivan-Clinton Expedition, which we've already covered. In 1781, he led another expedition against the Lenape/Delaware known as the Coshocton Expedition. It was during this expedition that he would have to restrain militia who wanted to kill Christianized Delaware living at the mission station of Gnadenhutten, something we've discussed in a previous post. Then, karma in the form of George Washington caught up with Brodhead. He was accused of misappropriating supplies and money earmarked for recruiting bonuses and removed from command. He was court-martialed and acquitted of all the charges except mishandling the recruiting funds. However, the court-martial found that his handling of the funds was justified under the circumstances and recommended no discipline. Washington brevetted Brodhead a Brigadier General and sidelined him to militia command for the rest of the War. He later married a wealthy widow, Rebecca Mifflin, from a well-known Pennsylvania family and helped found the Society of the Cincinnati, but he never held a field command again.
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